A Sound of Teaching—with Phil Timberlake— Broadcast on Montez Press Radio, Saturday, November 21st, 2020 11AM–12:00, Broadcast on WGXC, Tuesday December 1st, 2020, 2PM–3PM
A Sound of Teaching—with Phil Timberlake— Conversations with Phil Timberlake, actor and teacher of voice and speech for actors, leading us through exercises inspired by Roy Hart, Catherine Fitzmaurice, Arthur Lessac and Kristin Linklater and leading him through how he visually imagines a moment of his teaching.
Joined by Phil Timberlake
Phil Timberlake is an Associate Professor of Voice and Speech at DePaul University’s Theatre School. He is an Associate Teacher of Fitzmaurice Voicework and holds a Diploma as a Roy Hart Voice Teacher. Phil has been a Fulbright Fellow to France, and is currently an ensemble member at Chicago’s Lifeline Theatre.
Vocospherics, Broadcast on Montez Press Radio, Saturday, October 31st, 2020, 11AM–12, Broadcast on WGXC, Tuesday, November 3rd, 2020, 2PM–3PM
Vocospherics— Modulatet speech sounds to help diminish Covid’s spread? Thinking aloud around aerosolizations of voice — and what happens in the infrazone bettween mouth and mask.
Mimicry of, Broadcast on Montez Press Radio, Saturday, September 26th, 2020 11AM–12:00, Broadcast on WGXC,Tuesday, October 6th, 2020, 2PM–3PM
Mimicry of—To get used to the quality of speaking to yourself, sympathizing space and drawing the perimeter of the room with breath, hiking with Lia, decide what your feet are in, Bella reading some notes from Roger Caillois on Mimicry and Legendary Psychasthenia, Arthur Russell.
Serafina Musumeci-Mcginn, Jamie Lerman, Noyuri Umezaki, Jonathan Sherwood, Jennifer Choi, Amberrose Venus-Gordon, June Kim, Thea Zwier, Emily Monick, Sydney Williams, Amanda Giattino and Tim Simonds
artists from the Sculpture, Painting, Drawing, and Printmaking departments at Pratt with their Studio Writing professor, Tim Simonds.
A group of young artists from Pratt share a series of 10-minute segments exploring terrains of their own creative research through written and voiced language.
Artists from the Sculpture, Painting, Drawing, and Printmaking departments at Pratt have been exploring different ways that written and voiced language can relate to their studio practices: writing that ventriloquizes, exists in parallel, moves on a tangent, or intersects and diverges from their studio work. On this broadcast they share a series of 10-minute written or scripted works, that they have developed for radio.
Tserendulam Jargalsaikan, Makayla Bunce, Natalie Peterson, Devin Alexander, Clay Mears, Abril Barajas, Rosa Quimby, Katerina Yewell, Nicholas Zgraggen, Jordan King, Tanner Fox, and Tim Simonds
artists from the Sculpture, Painting, Drawing, and Printmaking departments at Pratt with their Studio Writing professor, Tim Simonds.
To explore the possibilities of finding parallels and divergences to outside worlds.
We have been exploring different ways that written and voiced language can relate to our studio practices– writing exists in parallels, and on tangents: a neglected narrator with stories to tell, the precarious existence of memories within objects, records of personal and impersonal relations to materials, promises of past, present, and future change, proposals for unmade films, inheritance and memories of stories over-told. On this broadcast we share a series of written or scripted works, exploring these terrains of written and voiced language.
A series of texts by Lyricka Robinson-Smith, Mia McCormick, Mavet Arellano, Colette Bernard, and Rebecca Johnson, written alongside each other in a class with Tim Simonds at Pratt Institute.
Lyricka Robinson-Smith, Mia McCormick, Mavet Arellano, Colette Bernard, and Rebecca Johnson, with Tim Simonds
A series of radio pieces by artists exploring writing in relation to their studio practices. The radio-texts were written and recorded in a class led by Timmy Simonds, “Studio Writing: Parallel Worlds,” at Pratt Institute.
in places deep enough to drown stars are little paper cut ups I'm sorry to impose on you. But, how do you know if you’re awake?
Not my voice but not really anyone’s voice either disembodied analytical nonsense, something from a sexed-up fairy tale found in the sunlight on the side of a house, and casting my shadow against it indicates there’s art to be found in ourselves.
You don’t make art, you find it.
November 2, 2021
11:32 pm
like a diary entry.
Time spent, although nothing around suggested this. Nothing to show.
Entering was the only thing that dated time.
Entering,
entering had happened.
I often feel as though these are situations I am stumbling upon and not creating.
[Like an imposter]
How do we feel secure when faced with the most unreliable narrator of all, ourselves?
(Collected, combined and composed from our radio-texts)
Chloe Rees, Bhairum Jumbala Na Ayudhaya, Devan Armeni , Devon Gordon, Dylan Newlon, Ezra Ooghe, Liberty Grace, Madison Costello, Matthew Hopen, and Naomi Larson, with Tim Simonds